Case sensitivity
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Case sensitivity occurs when data, particularly strings, which differ only in letter case, are considered different. An algorithm or function that exhibits case sensitivity is said to be case-sensitive; one that does not is said to be case-insensitive. For example, the Pascal compiler is case-insensitive, because every reserved word and every identifier may be typed in uppercase, lowercase, or mixed-case, with no difference whatsoever to the meaning. On the other hand, when Pascal compares strings encoded in ASCII, the strings a and A are considered to be unequal, with A being smaller, so we say that this comparison is case-sensitive.